Ben Gurion University
Ben
Gurion University - David Newman's (Dean of Social Sciences and
Humanities) Hysterical attack against Isracampus; De-legitimatizes
criticism by Im Tirtzu and the ISZ report
These were not
isolated incidents. The past few years have witnessed a growth in
right-wing activity aimed at delegitimizing the country's
universities and their academic staff. To ISZ and Im Tirtzu can be
added Isracampus and NGO Monitor, both of which have targeted
academics and NGOs which hold views, or promote projects, which are
not in line with their well-funded right-wing agendas.
The objective
of these organizations is clear and has nothing to do with academic
objectivity or balanced research. They are out to impose their own
single-minded view of Israel and Zionism, close down any form of
critical discourse and, given the nature of the present government,
influence the legislators in the Knesset to support their cause.
The main
problem with both the ISZ report and the Im Tirtzu letter is that
they are full of false and highly selective information. ISZ, headed
by former West Bank settlement leader Yisrael Harel, chose to focus
on just a few research projects and courses out of the hundreds
which are taught, conveniently ignoring the diversity of research
which goes on in the country's sociology and anthropology
departments. The Im Tirtzu letter put out false information about a
dynamic and highly popular academic department which promotes social
and political awareness among its students.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=185763
A dangerous
political agenda
The
objective of organizations like Im Tirtzu has nothing to do with
academic objectivity.
By DAVID
NEWMAN
24/08/2010
Academic
politics reached an intense peak last week, first with the
circulation of a so-called research report by the selfstyled
Institute for Strategic Zionism (ISZ), followed closely by the
well-orchestrated media publication of the letter sent by the
right-wing student organization Im Tirtzu to the president of
Ben-Gurion
University, Prof. Rivka Karmi. The draft ISZ report made a strong
attack on the country's sociology departments, accusing them of
teaching and researching post-Zionism and anti-state theories. The
Im Tirtzu letter accused the Politics Department at BGU of imposing
leftwing theories and values on its students, and threatened Karmi
that unless the university began to employ right-wing professors, it
would persuade donors from abroad – especially North America – to
cease donating.
These were not
isolated incidents. The past few years have witnessed a growth in
right-wing activity aimed at delegitimizing the country's
universities and their academic staff. To ISZ and Im Tirtzu can be
added Isracampus and NGO Monitor, both of which have targeted
academics and NGOs which hold views, or promote projects, which are
not in line with their well-funded right-wing agendas.
The objective
of these organizations is clear and has nothing to do with academic
objectivity or balanced research. They are out to impose their own
single-minded view of Israel and Zionism, close down any form of
critical discourse and, given the nature of the present government,
influence the legislators in the Knesset to support their cause.
The main
problem with both the ISZ report and the Im Tirtzu letter is that
they are full of false and highly selective information. ISZ, headed
by former West Bank settlement leader Yisrael Harel, chose to focus
on just a few research projects and courses out of the hundreds
which are taught, conveniently ignoring the diversity of research
which goes on in the country's sociology and anthropology
departments. The Im Tirtzu letter put out false information about a
dynamic and highly popular academic department which promotes social
and political awareness among its students.
This same
department, most of whose faculty are immigrants from the West, who
teach air force cadets and who head up the both the university's
center for European studies and the recently created African studies
center, have been collectively labeled as anti-Zionist and traitors.
The political
agenda of these organizations has become even clearer this past week
as it has been revealed that, among other foreign donors, the ISZ
has been funded by the right-wing Hudson Institute in the US, which
has also funded activities of Prime Minister
Binyamin
Netanyahu's
special security adviser and well-known political hawk, Dr. Uzi Arad.
Im Tirtzu has been receiving designated financial aid from
right-wing Christian Evangelist pastor
John Hagee,
channeled through the due diligence of the Jewish Agency who do not
see this as problematic.
RIGHT-WING
GROUPS do not like it when they are accused of McCarthyism. But when
you try to influence the hiring (and firing) policy of universities
based on political views, that is McCarthyism. And when you plant
people in classes and at conferences to write false reports about
what is discussed to further your political agenda and create a
sense of fear among students, this is McCarthyism. And when you try
to intervene in the curriculum in a highly selective fashion, this
is McCarthyism. When you portray anyone who doesn't agree with you
as being anti-state, abetting the enemy and not sufficiently
patriotic, this is McCarthyism – pure and simple.
The senior
academic establishment has finally awakened to the danger. Clear
statements have been made by the rectors and presidents of Haifa,
Tel Aviv and Ben- Gurion universities. Over the weekend, the Joint
University Committee of Academic Faculty, along with the Basha'ar
think tank, both of which represent a wide range of academics with
political views across the spectrum condemned the threat tactics of
ISZ and Im Tirtzu and restated the basic principles of academic
freedom.
And there is
more to come. It is understood that now that the sociologists and
political scientists have been dealt with, the next targeted groups
are philosophers and Israeli historians. And there are plenty of
journalists out there who are quite happy to publish this
information without checking any of the facts, as has been so
evident during the past week.
Universities
exist not only to teach a profession. They also exist to make their
students socially and politically aware, and actively involved in
the debates concerning the society and state in which they live.
Without
critical discourse and constant challenging of accepted theories,
there would be little point in having social science and humanities
faculties. And as long as the views which are taught do not break
the law and do not incite violence, it is incumbent on our students
and researchers to cover the broadest possible spectrum of views.
The fact that
the country's universities also house some of the most extreme
right-wing professors, under the guise of the
Professors for
a Strong Israel
organization, is conveniently forgotten by ISZ, Im Tirtzu and
like-minded organizations. If you agree with them, you are a patriot
(self-appointed), but if you hold a different opinion you are a
traitor and should be fired.
Their
assertion that only like-minded people are hired for academic
positions is not only nonsensical, it is insulting to the country's
universities and research centers, which enjoy international
prestige for the high quality of their research.
Over a period
of almost 15 years I have been involved in the hiring and promotion
of many academics, and I can state categorically that at no time has
the political preferences or opinions of a candidate ever been part
of the decision-making process. The quality of a person's research,
his/her international prestige and the recommendations received from
academic peers are the sole criteria, and it is harmful and damaging
to suggest anything else. It would indeed behoove our academic
institutions to become more transparent about the promotion and
tenure process so that this false argument could be buried once and
for all.
Not only do
ISZ and Im Tirtzu threaten freedom of expression and academic
freedom, they are doing great harm to Israel's reputation as a place
of open debate and diversity of opinion. This damage is far greater
than that caused by a small number of Israeli professors who have
supported an academic boycott – a stance rejected by 99 percent of
Israel's academic community regardless of their political positions
and opinions.
Of even
greater concern is the fact that their activities are creating an
environment in which both students and faculty, by their own
admission, are beginning to feel afraid of voicing their own
opinions and to feel physically threatened as well.
It is time for
all those who believe in freedom of speech to stand up and voice
their clear opposition to those who would try to deny it. The use of
false and selective information by ISZ, Im Tirtzu and Isracampus,
the atmosphere of threat which they are creating and their use of
misinformed foreign donors to promote their political cause is
finally being exposed for what it really is – a threat to the
democratic fabric of a vibrant and dynamic State of Israel.
The writer is
professor of political geography at Ben-Gurion University and editor
of the International Journal, Geopolitics. He is also dean of the
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at BGU, one of the
founders of the Department of Politics and Government – the target
of the Im Tirtzu report – and has represented Israel's universities
in the UK against all attempts to impose an academic boycott.
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